Published: May 11, 2009
Anita Borg Institute Honors Three Prominent Women in Technology at Women of Vision Awards Banquet
PALO ALTO, Calif. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - The Anita
Borg Institute for Women and Technology (ABI) hosted its fourth
annual Women
of Vision Awards banquet on April 30th to honor three
leaders in technology: The evening highlighted the winners'
accomplishments and contributions in three areas: Innovation, Leadership
and Social Impact.
Attracting 650 attendees, the attendees included industry and academic
professionals and college women. More than 136 students attended the
event, their attendance sponsored by technology companies and local
universities.
Padmasree Warrior, CTO of Cisco, was the keynote speaker at the event.
Her speech, entitled "Fear Stays Silent While Passion Speaks," addressed
five themes she has evolved throughout her career:
-
Every transition brings a growth opportunity
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You can gain speed at a turn
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Leaders blur boundaries
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The best way to gain recognition is to give it away
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Opportunity is a mold waiting to be reshaped
In her acceptance speech, Yuqing Gao, winner in the Innovation category
for her development of a speech to speech translation technology, spoke
of her two guiding principles, "focus and risk taking" and that "without
the sense of being challenged and the desire of conquering the
challenges, there would be no path for progress and innovation."
Jan Cuny, winner in the Social Impact category, spoke about the need to
include underrepresented minorities and women in computing. "We need
them because, as a nation, we are really dangerously under-producing the
number of undergraduate and graduate degrees that we need to keep a
competitive IT workforce. We need them because without their talents and
creativity we'll miss opportunities for innovation."
Leadership winner, Mitchell Baker, spoke about her hope that "all of us
work to empower ordinary people or seemingly ordinary people to enable
more of us to do extraordinary things and see what kind of results we
can achieve."
The evening concluded with Kathleen Collins, representing Congresswoman
Zoe Lofgren, who presented the three winners with Special Congressional
Recognition Certificates.
The 2009 Women of Vision Awards was supported by a Dinner Host -
Lockheed Martin. Silver sponsors were Cisco, NetApp, SAP and Symantec.
Bronze Sponsors were Adobe, Career Action Center, Google, Intuit, and
Juniper. The growth of this event over last year marks an increase in
both financial support and recognition of the importance of the Anita
Borg Institute's mission.
About the Women of Vision Award Winners
Mitchell Baker, Chairperson, Mozilla Corporation
Mitchell Baker is the Women of Vision Award winner in the Leadership
category. Mitchell Baker is recognized for her work as the leader of the
Mozilla Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to openness and
innovation on the Internet. Her work with the Mozilla Foundation and the
Firefox Web Browser has evolved the technology around web browsing with
more than 200 million users worldwide. Her leadership in the Open Source
movement has impacted millions of people, through her way of integrating
and unifying the work of company employees and an international
community of volunteers.
Yuqing Gao, Senior Manager, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
Yuqing Gao is the Women of Vision Award winner in the Innovation
category. Yuqing Gao headed the Laboratory for Speech to Speech
Translation Systems at IBM. She was also the principal investigator of
DARPA CAST and TransTac Programs at IBM and led the research and
development of IBM MASTOR (Multilingual Automatic Speech-to-Speech
Translator) systems which is leading the industry in automated speech
translation. Her work in speech processing has led to the development of
an English-Iraqi speech to speech translation system, which is deployed
with the US military and enables personnel to interact directly with
civilians in Iraq.
Jan Cuny, Program Director, National Science Foundation
Jan Cuny is the Women of Vision Award winner in the Social Impact
category. Jan Cuny has been a passionate voice for women and
under-represented minorities in her work with the National Science
Foundation's Broadening Participation in Computing Program. She has
successfully created broader participation in computing programs. Her
work has gone beyond funding programs to building an inclusive community
for under-represented groups in technology, allowing them to use and
create technology, ensuring they will be qualified for roles in our
technology driven world.
About the Women of Vision Awards
The three Women of Vision Award winners were selected from a field of
more than 65 nominees, all of whom are engaged in technology professions
in industry, academia, NGOs or government chosen by a selection
committee of industry and academic leaders. Videos about the three
winners are posted on the ABIWT
channel on YouTube.
About the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology (ABI)
The Anita Borg Institute provides resources and programs to help
industry, academia, and government recruit, retain, and develop women
leaders in high-tech fields, resulting in higher levels of technological
innovation. ABI programs serve high-tech women by creating a community
and providing tools to help them develop their careers. ABI is a
not-for-profit 501(c) 3 charitable organization. ABI Partners include:
Google, Microsoft Corporation, HP, Sun Microsystems, Cisco, Intel, SAP,
Lockheed Martin, NetApp, NSF, IBM, Symantec, Amazon, CA, Intuit,
Genentech and Capgemini. For more information, visit www.anitaborg.org.
Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology
Jerri Barrett,
650-857-6095
jerrib@anitaborg.org
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